No there are not. There are places that encourage freedom of religion instead. Which is amazing considering its written 1400 years ago.
“So warn them: your only task is to warn, you’re not supposed to force them.” (Qur’an,
88:21-22)
“Had your Lord wanted, all the people on earth would have believed. So will you force people to believe?” (Qur’an,
10:99)
“ There is no compulsion in religion…” (Qur’an,
2:256)
Excuse me, but you are making as if Muhammad or Islam (or the Qur'an) invented "religious tolerance" or "freedom of religion".
They didn't.
Freedom of religion have occur in many empires before that of Muhammad.
Before Muhammad, Augustus' policy was everyone were free to free to follow whatever religions they want, and believe in whatever gods they want. It wasn't his policy for anyone living in his empire to Roman religion. In fact, the Romans were free to worship any non-Roman deity he or she desired.
Of course, the Romans did later persecute Christians, and destroyed Jewish temple, but that because the Judaeans rebelled, and Rome's answer to any form of rebellions is to take punitive measures. Also, the Romans didn't understand Judaism or the worship of one God, so sometimes the Roman actions may cause offences, which might cause to Jews to rebel.
And of course, not all Roman emperors after Augustus would follow Augustus' policies.
Then there is Alexander the Great. No one were forced to worship Greek religion. He had anyone forcibly converted.
And in the Achaemenid Persian empire, before Alexander, there were no policies that force people in the provinces to adopt Zoroastrianism. People were free to follow their native religions or cults.
And if you look at the empires after Muhammad. The Mongolian empire of Ghengis Khan has a policy of freedom of religion. Ghengis Had never force others to adopt Mongol religion. He was even willing to learn from other religions.
And Muhammad's action sometimes contradict the Qur'an's verse of "no compulsion".
When he only spared men of Banu Qurayza from beheading because they had converted...that's compulsion.
When he ordered idols to be destroyed in Mecca, and elsewhere on the Arabian peninsula, that's not the action of freedom of religion. Again, compulsion.
More recently, with regarding to the Egyptian Christians or Copts, often have Egyptian Muslims acting like mob, destroying their churches, businesses or residential properties, simply because they are "not Muslims", demonstrated that Muslims in that country don't believe in equality. As long as there are Egyptians that don't convert to Islam, they would always be treated as "second citizens" by the Muslims. That's clearly another sign of compulsion.